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SPRAY FROM THE OCEAN 
OF THOUGHT 



SPRAY FROM THE OCEAN 
OF THOUGHT 



BY 

HARRY SHOBBROOK COLLINS 



<$> 



THE BOOKERY PUBLISHING COMPANY 
^ NEW YORK 

L. N. FOWLER & CO 

LONDON 






Copyright, 1913, 
Harry Shobbrook Collins 
All Rights Reserved 



©Ci.A36120 



DEDICATED 

IN LOVING MEMORY 

TO THE FACES THAT ARE GONE 



"Memory and affection are not limited to that association 
with matter by which alone they can manifest themselves here 
and now, and personality persists beyond bodily death." 

— Sir Oliver Lodge. 



CONTENTS 



PAGE 

Around the Curve 18 

Aim High 19 49 

Always Ready 27 

Ambition 30 52 

Advertising 33 

A Thought a Day 35 

All Alike 39 

Armour of Light 40 

A Day at a Time 41 

Atmospheric Influence .... 50 

Affinity 50 

Affectation 50 

Advantages 51 

Abstinence 54 

Aim of Religion 57 

Adversity 58 

A Mother's Love 58 

Apologizing 60 

Abundance 60 

A Trinity 61 

A Man's Character 11 

Anticipating Trouble 14 

Autumn 15 

A Sympathetic Hand 17 

A Glimpse Beyond 60 

A Helpful Saying 27 

A Small Offering 18 

Bank Accounts 23 

Biggest Fish 29 

Belief in Self 31 

"Bide a Wee" 39 

Blazing a Trail 35 

Birthday Wish 47 58 

Babies 52 57 

Brain, The 54 

Bad Thoughts 56 



PAGE 

Better Understanding.... 61 

Book of Memory 14 

Be Yourself 62 

Birth of an Idea 22 

Balance- Wheel of Business 48 

Creeds and Formulas 51 

Camera 18 

Conscious Power 19 

Companionship 22 

'Change Front' 23 

Compensation 24 

Cap and Bells 27 

Children, Training of 28 

Course of a Life 28 

Compensation Balance .... 29 

Concentration 13 33 

Conventionality 35 

Confidence 36 

Change the Current 38 

Courage of Convictions ... 39 

Competition 49 

Conquest 60 

Cheerful Letters 44 

Capital Punishment 50 

Confession 53 

Charity 16 

Capacity for Suffering .... 25 

Cold Radiators 61 

Christian Science 30 

Catastrophies 11 

Control of Tongue 12 

Cheerful Appearance 61 

Day of Rest 19 

Dogology 23 

Disappointments 54 



CONTENTS 



PAGE 

Dress 24 

Do it Now 30 

"Didn't Mean to" 38 

Dispelling Mental Clouds.. 42 

Dreams 50 

Doing for Others 45 

Divorce 46 

Doubt 46 

Dorothy 47 

Death 14 51 

Do ye nextte thynge 52 

Dark-Room of Life 52 

Do Your Best 59 

Decision 12 

Difficulty of Subject 15 

Estrangements 26 

Expression 20 

Earnest Effort 48 

Empty Laugh 50 

Economy 55 

Education of Children. ... 28 

Eliminating 11 

Essentials to Success 13 

Education 15 

"Experience Bought" 15 

Facial Expression 19 

Father Time 21 

Fear 29 32 

Faith 40 43 56 

Fun and Nonsense 44 

Forgetfulness 58 

Flashlight Pictures 59 

Fate 62 

Form an Opinion 13 

Flowers 42 

Frailty of Woman 16 

Friendly Letter 22 

Favorite Books 12 

Fine Feathers 13 

Girl in Love 27 

Gumption 34 

God is Spirit 35 



PAGE 

Gleams of Sunlight 42 

Good Resolutions 48 

Gathering Shells 11 

Giving Advice 14 

Get in Tune 34 

Humor 20 

Hvpothesis — Fundamental. 23 

He and She 26 

Holy Water 31 

Hand-made Book 43 

Handwriting on the Wall. 45 

Home 47 

Hope 49 

Headaches 49 

Harmony 50 57 

Heredity 52 

Happy Moments 53 

Husbands and Wives 53 

Home Influence 55 

Horses and Dogs 57 

Honor 57 

Hell 58 

Haifa Life 26 

Helpful Joy 57 

Human Nature 34 

Individuality 28 

Imagination 30 51 

Impossible, The 31 

Impotency of Worry 42 

I Know 44 

Imagination v. Reality .... 46 

Ink 49 

Ingratitude 58 

Incubus or Blessing? 27 

Just Punishment 55 

Joys 19 

Kind Word or Smile 18 

Kindred Spirits 37 

Knowing a Subject 12 

Little Things 63 

Lot's Wife 29 



CONTENTS 



PAGE 

Life 32 

Large Feet 46 

Liquid Armour 48 

Libelous Story 48 

Lost Opportunities 53 

Little Opportunities 56 

Laziness 55 

Love 59 

Letting Go 61 

Lens of Memory 43 

Laws of Nature 44 

Lost Prayers 48 

Language Divine 41 

Memory 17 18 

Music 17 

Marriage 25 

Matrimony 25 

Making Others Happy 12 

Misunderstandings 40 

Monkeys 33 

Metaphysical Healing 39 

'Micawbers' 40 

MSS 41 

Mark Tapley 42 

Momentum 49 

Moral Courage 54 

Mental Derelict 59 

Matrimonial Separations. . 51 

Master Your Difficulty. ... 11 

Merits of a Book 14 

New Days 16 

New Subject 19 

Names 21 

New Thought 32 

New Scenes 46 

New Year's Resolutions. . 57 

Never Abandon Task 13 

Nail to the Mast 15 

Oil on Waters 59 

Old Maids 22 

Our Clothes 30 

Our Bodies 31 

Our Personality 31 



PAGE 

Our Food 33 

Our Horizon 33 

One Step at a Time 36 

Opportunities 58 

Our Real Strength 43 

Old Men 46 

Our Word 51 

Our Future State 13 

Old Bachelors 22 

Open Sesame 60 

Optimism 62 

Oil Paintings 17 

Point of View 16 

Photography 17 

Pretty Girls 20 

Pictures — Influence of . . . . 24 

Practical People 30 

Pre-Natalism 36 

Poverty 38 58 

Plan Ahead 40 

Pioneers 45 

Purgatory 52 

Philosophy 54 

Punctuality 55 

Prejudice 55 60 

Passivity 60 

Preparation for Next World 12 

Prayer 15 20 

Power of Mind 21 

Pray without Ceasing. ... 33 
Philosophy of Poverty .... 45 

Propinquity 46 

Patience 14 48 

Physical Body v. Mind. . . 61 

Ray of Sunlight 44 

Recognition 39 

Religions 18 

Relativity 26 

Rainbow 23 

Rosary of Memories 25 

Rowing 26 

Religious Beliefs 29 

Regret 32 51 

Reading 13 56 



CONTENTS 



PAGE 

Rest 12 58 

Resurrection 53 57 

System 47 

Scentless Rose 22 

Sprinkle Sand 23 

Sweet Remembrances 24 

Sympathy 25 

Supernatural, The 31 

Stinging Nettle 33 

Spiritualism 37 

Suggestions 37 

Sickness — Suggestion of. . . 38 

Seeds of Discord 40 

Self-Treatment 44 

Sleep 44 

Steady Eifort 46 

Smoking 46 

Silence 47 

Self-Control 54 

Sufieering 48 

Self-Discipline 49 

Spiritual Growth 49 

Success 51 

Self -Knowledge 51 53 

Slang 56 

Sin 56 

Stubborness 56 

Self -Reliance 39 

Suicide 57 

Spirit Friends 63 

Shattered Hopes 59 

Sarcasm 59 

Shooting the Rapids 13 

Shadows 25 

Strength of Faith 50 

Systematizing 61 

Sorrows 11 

Stranger to Self 59 

Sympathetic Souls 27 

Shallow Brook, The 47 

Speaking Kindly 58 

The Little Leaven 59 

The Devil 17 



PAGE 

Thoughts Rejected 18 

Time 63 22 

Thought Currents 35 

True Religion 29 

Three Classes of People ... 29 

Tune Instrument 37 

The Bible 37 

Timidity 41 

Troublous Thoughts 41 

True Christianity 42 

Telepathy 45 

Trifles 46 

The Everlasting Hills 47 

The Last Day of the Year 47 

True Christians 48 

The Weakest Point 50 

The Divine 56 

Timeliness 60 

"They Say" 63 

Talents 15 

Tale Bearers 16 

Too Much Success 16 

The Sabbath 19 

The 'Blues' 20 

Understanding Others .... 53 

Unpleasant Thoughts 34 

Uncharitable Thoughts 40 

Unexpressed 19 

Vegetarianism 31 

Veneer of Civilization .... 34 

Versatility 43 45 

Vibrant Chords 10 

Voice of the Soul 48 

Voice of God 49 

Worry 17 

Woman 54 

Woman's Way 34 

Working One's Passage . . 45 

Work 50 

Weather Cocks 15 

Your Ailments 39 

Yes and No 20 



10 



SPRAY FROM THE OCEAN 
OF THOUGHT 

"Master Your Difficulty" — When we, by our 
own efforts, Master our Difficulty, overcome obstacles 
in our path, we inevitably draw additional help and 
strength from the entire universe. In proportion, as 
we help ourselves, so are we by a fixed law of nature 
helped by higher forces, though we may be uncon- 
scious of the source of our strength. 

Gathering shells by the ocean reminds one of 
gathering pleasures along the pathway of Life. The 
realization of our wishes generally falls short of our 
anticipations ; even as, on securing a beautiful shell 
from the sea, it loses part of its iridescence as soon 
as taken from the water — and we have become pos- 
sessed of that for which we so much wished. 

A man's character is generally written so plainly 
on his face that if, in deciding thereby, you do not 
happen to make a "bull's eye," you are pretty sure 
to hit the target somewhere. 

Even as a tree is pruned to cause it to bear better 
fruit, so should we eliminate all superfluities from our 
minds, and give the good and true more room to 
flourish. 

11 



SPRAY FROM THE OCEAN OF THOUGHT 

What we regard at the time as a great catas- 
trophe, may, viewed through the light of subsequent 
events, turn out to be a blessing in disguise. 

The more a person really knows about a subject, 
the less likely is he to indiscriminately talk about it. 

First make up your mind as to the validity of do- 
ing an action ; then do it — as soon as possible. 

There is no surer guide to the general trend of a 
man's character than his favorite books. 

The best preparation we can make for the next 
world is to do our best in this. 

Those to whom labor is unknown cannot enjoy 
the exquisite delight of a well-earned rest. 

To be able to use the tongue fluently is undoubt- 
edly a great advantage in many cases ; but the power 
to keep silent is equally advantageous. 

Undoubtedly the greatest happiness consists in 
making others happy. As a general rule, to pursue 
happiness alone is like chasing a jack-o'-lantern — as 
we approach, it recedes. But not thinking of our- 
selves, let us make someone else happy, and lo ! the 
happiness inevitably recoils on us. As the Bard of 
Avon says of Mercy, "It is twice blest ; it blesseth 
him that gives and him that takes." It is impossible 
to do a good action for another without deriving 
benefit ourselves. 

12 



SPRAY FROM THE OCEAN OF THOUGHT 

Ofttimes that which is ascribed to genius should 
more properly be attributed to that silent giant, 
concentration, which is the lever by which mountains 
can be removed. 

Do not read great authors solely wdth a view to 
inoculating yourself with their idea on a certain sub- 
ject; but reason the matter out and form an opinion 
of your own. 

We, by our actions here, build up for ourselves our 
future state, either for good or ill. Let us keep this 
thought in mind and remember that each one of us 
must work out his own salvation, sooner or later. 

Through reading good books our minds become 
filled with good thoughts ; and good thoughts lead 
to good actions. 

Remember that Method, Punctuality, and Perse- 
verance are the three essentials to success in any line 
of action. 

Never abandon a task at first sight as being too 
difficult to be undertaken ; make a start and the 
chances are that you wdll not find it half as difficult 
as you had imagined. 

"Fine feathers make fine birds" ; but never yet did 
fine clothes make a lady or a gentleman. 

The way to shoot the many rapids which are to be 
encountered during the course of a lifetime is to man 
your barque with Truth, Honesty, Courage and En- 
ergy, and to have Hope at the rudder. 

13 



SPRAY FROM THE OCEAN OF THOUGHT 

Death : The turnstile to a higher life. 

A VERY large proportion of the unhappiness in this 
world is caused by anticipating casualties which never 
take place. 

Patience is the keynote of many a chord in which 
success is struck. 

What different notions many people would have, 
who, if instead of standing on the edge of the boister- 
ous pool shouting advice to the swimmer within, were 
to find themselves in his place! 

Remembrances of happy days gone by are un- 
fading flowers pressed in the book of Memory. 

The merits of a book are seen in due proportion 
to the mind of the person reading. No two people 
can ever read a book from exactly the same point of 
view. Each reader automatically weaves, between 
the lines, thoughts of the past or dreams of the fu- 
ture, which have been awakened by the sympathetic 
chords which the author has struck; and it largely 
depends on the number of chords struck how much we 
enjoy and profit by the book. Looking at the matter 
from a perfectly natural standpoint — that of evolu- 
tionary growth — even as we are ever enlarging our 
ideas and adding to our store of memories, so we can 
never re-read a book with exactly the same emotions 
as before. Many heartstrings, erstwhile silent, will vi- 
brate in sympathetic harmony with divers chords 
which the author has struck, and in so doing call 
forth an attendant train of thought. It is not the 
quantity of matter we read, but that which we assim- 
ilate, which does us the most good. 

14 



SPRAY FROM THE OCEAN OF THOUGHT 

Education is to a man what the process of polish- 
ing is to marble or granite. 

Materialize your prayers ; let not your **Te 
Deums*' be mere words — let them be deeds. 

Once having determined in your conscience that 
you are sailing under the right colors, nail them to 
the mast. 

Do not put much faith in a man who boasts of 
never having been taken in by others. Even as blows 
on the skull are said to strengthen it, so experience 
"bought" strengthens the moral character of an 
individual. Experientia Docet. 

Autumn always reminds one of old age ; then 
comes Winter, the — to use our poor word, as Oliver 
Wendell Holmes says — Death ; which is but the dark 
hour that precedes the dawn of vernal Spring. 

We are apt to judge the talents of others, not by 
any fixed standard of excellence, but by our own 
talent, relative to the subject at issue. 

The more difficult the subject, the greater impetus 
it should give us to persevere in our endeavors to 
master it ; because in proportion to the difficulties to 
be surmounted, will be the number of competitors in 
the race. 

There are, alas ! many people who remind us of 
the weather-cocks on the church steeples : they are all 
the time being turned hither and thither on the breeze 
of other peoples' opinions ! 

15 



SPRAY FROM THE OCEAN OF THOUGHT 

Charity: The essence of Christianity. 

Avoid tale-bearers even as you would a venomous 
serpent. "Mind your own business" is one of the fin- 
est mottoes extant ; and the one who does so has no 
time, neither inclination, to pry into the affairs of 
others. 

A GREAT talk is sometimes made about the frailty 
of woman. We have never yet come across half a 
dozen men, who could in any way compare in stabil- 
ity with six of the "weaker" sex whom we could pick 
from amongst our acquaintance. If ever there is a 
revised edition of old proverbs issued, we would 
respectfully make the suggestion that, instead of 
"Frailty, thy name is Woman," it should read, 
"Frailty, thy name is Man." 

Let us in charity remember that the many differ- 
ent opinions on a subject are formed from the point 
of view of the utterer. The higher we climb, the 
more extended is our range of vision. 

Let us regard each new day as we used to the first 
page in our copybooks, when children at school ; that 
is, put forth our best efforts in connection therewith, 
and do our best to keep the same free from blots and 
blurs. 

Too much success at the start has ofttimes been 
the cause of subsequent failure. 

16 



SPRAY FROM THE OCEAN OF THOUGHT 

Does it not seem, at least, paradoxical, that the 
very people who are loudest in the praise of an all- 
powerful, personal God, are the first to attribute to 
the devil any seeming wonder that they do not happen 
to understand. 

One powerful aid in exorcising the demon of worry 
from our minds is to strenuously avoid, as much 
as possible, using even the word. 

Whilst we are ever living in the present, let us 
not forget that memory can only dwell in the past — 
to which is being added each fleeting moment. 

Thanks to the popular art of photography, we 
can now, with materialized memories, vividly recall 
the pleasant moments of our ramblings. 

From babyhood to the grave, what is there so com- 
forting in time of sickness or sorrow ; so strengthen- 
ing in the hour of fear ; or when we have allowed the 
"cares that infest the day" to twang on our heart 
strings and create discord within us — what so har- 
monizing and soothing — as the gentle pressure of a 
sympathetic hand. 

Many people are like oil paintings ; seen to the 
best advantage from a little distance. 

As a creator of harmony in connection with the 
nervous system, which in turn acts directly on the 
physical, music is destined to become widely known 
as a most pleasing and efficient therapeutical agent. 

17 



SPRAY FROM THE OCEAN OF THOUGHT 

No one so poor but that they can at least donate 
a kind word or a smile ; a small offering, maybe, but 
who can estimate the result thereof? 

A VAST number of us, instead of getting the most 
we can out of our present environment, are ever won- 
dering what is "just around the curve." 

One of the many lessons which the camera teaches 
us is that one all-important item to be considered, in 
connection with any subject, is the point of view. 

Almost everyone is naturally endowed, more or 
less, with an appreciative faculty for the humorous ; 
but for a reader to thoroughly realize and appreciate 
the sweetest, tenderest, most pathetic utterances of 
the pen, he or she must at some time, in days gone by, 
have passed through very similar experiences, and so 
the chords of memory vibrate in sympathetic har- 
mony. 

When we strip from the various great religions of 
the world the parasitical accumulations of past ages 
and come to their true centre, we find that, except in 
name, there is, in their fundamental principles, but 
little difference. 

Some of the most beautiful, inspiring thoughts 
that have ever been voiced have been rejected by their 
hearers because the moral rectitude of the utterer was 
doubted. Instead of refusing to assimilate a high and 
noble thought, because of the source from which it 
emanates, would it not be better to remember that 
truth is truth, wherever and however found ; and, like 
"Sunshine, broken in the rill, though turned astray, 
is sunshine still." 

18 



SPRAY FROM THE OCEAN OF THOUGHT 

In inverse proportion to their knowledge of any 
new subject are the vehement assertions and bitter 
denunciations of its opponents. 

The most supreme feeling of conscious power is 
that caused by having conquered one's self. 

Apart from any so-called religious view of the 
matter, one day in each week should be kept, as much 
as possible, as a Day of Rest. It is better so for the 
individual, and therefore better for the country gen- 
erally. 

Whatever is sinful on the Sabbath is equally so 
on the other six days of the week. From a moral 
standpoint, every day should be a Sunday. 

Ofttimes, the sweetest, tenderest thoughts are 
those which, though unexpressed, are felt by those 
whose souls are in harmony. 

The intensity of our j oy s and sorrows admits of no 
fixed standard, the degree of everything being based 
on relativity. 

As surely as dripping water wears away a stone, 
so surely, in the course of time, do one's thoughts 
effect, through the medium of expression, an organic 
change in the contour of our faces. 

Aim high, make a target of the stars if you will — 
but don't forget to keep your feet on terra firma. 

19 



SPRAY FROM THE OCEAN OF THOUGHT 

Humor, blessed humor ! what a balm of Gilead 
thou art to the wounded spirit ; what a solace in the 
time of trouble ; how many thou hast saved from a 
broken heart, when they have awakened to the cruel 
reality that the "Saint Cecilia" of their dreams had 
not enough music in her soul to enable her to operate 
a hand-organ ! 

Yes and No : two of the shortest words, yet withal 
the most powerful, in their influence for good or ill. 

Whenever you begin to feel "blue" and have an 
inclination to view things in a gloomy, apprehensive 
spirit, start in and do something ; work is the sover- 
eign safeguard against worry. 

If you have anything pleasing which you feel you 
want to say to a friend, regarding himself, do not 
hold back from the fear that it may be thought flat- 
tery — say it. Do not try to suppress it ; expression 
is Life. One is apt to hear disagreeable things 
quickly enough; therefore, if you have a flower to 
throw occasionally, don't stay your hand. 

Mere words do not constitute a Prayer. Prayer 
is earnest aspiration, coupled with Faith, which is the 
"substance of things hoped for." 

A GROUP of pretty young girls invariably reminds 
one of a flower garden, the physical and mental attri- 
butes of each individual suggesting some particular 
flower; the gamut ranging from a seeming incarna- 
tion of the sweet little violet or the fragrant, cling- 
ing stephanotis to the sensitive mimosa or the sturdy, 
self-reliant sunflower. 

20 



SPRAY FROM THE OCEAN OF THOUGHT 

In our childhood, old Father Time moves along as 
though his feet were encased in weighted diver's 
boots ; in later years, he glides by as though on ball- 
bearing roller skates ! 

Some names we literally "fall in love" with at 
sight ; and thus, through the name, we feel drawn to 
the unknown possessor. On the other hand, it some- 
times happens that we grow to love a name, after 
knowing the owner. 

One of the simplest, most common, most convinc- 
ing, yet withal most ignored demonstrations, from a 
so-called scientific point of view, of the therapeutical 
power of Mind, is evinced over and over again by 
little children. Who has not seen a little tot, after 
getting pretty badly hurt, run to mamma for her to 
"kiss the place and make it well"? And when mamma 
says, "There, it's all gone ; baby's all right now" ; 
have we not seen the little face, which just before was 
suffused with big tear-drops, brighten into a smile, 
and away the little patient runs, all the pain having 
disappeared. Yet as we grow older, instead of the 
idea suggested by this simple method of treatment, 
being allowed to remain and grow with us, we have 
been given to understand that such was only of bene- 
fit to the "imagination" of the infantile mind. Why? 
Are not the fundamental principles of all the differ- 
ent methods of metaphysical healing demonstrated 
when a mother "kisses away the pain" from her little 
child .^^ Is it consistent to use and believe in the effi- 
cacy "of such a method of treatment for the little 
ones, and then ridicule what is practically the same 
power at work in the adult .'^ 

21 



SPRAY FROM THE OCEAN OF THOUGHT 

Old bachelors, like old port, are generally 
"crusty." 

Some of the sweetest, tenderest souls 'have been 
"old maids," and at times, when in an unguarded mo- 
ment, they have thrown open for an instant the secret 
chamber of their hearts, one has realized how that, 
hidden beneath a calm, cheerful, sunny exterior, they 
have ever carried with them an aching void, which 
only the ties of motherhood, innately dear and sacred 
to all true women, could fill. 

Ofttimes a line of thought is lying dormant in 
our minds, of which we know not the existence even, 
until perchance some stray word uttered by a friend 
acts like an electric spark on a train of gunpowder ; 
and lo ! a new idea is evolved within us. 

Time, the great healer of our wounds, enhances 
e'en our deepest sorrows with the soft, mellow tints 
of an Indian Summer. 

How much more we enjoy a lovely sunset, a beau- 
tiful picture or a pathetic story, if, in our admiration 
or sympathy, we have company. 

The prettiest face, unless lighted from within by 
the unextinguishable light of a beautiful soul, sug- 
gests to one the idea of a scentless rose. 

Oh the comfort of being able to pour out one's 
thoughts in a friendly letter! In talking, many of 
us feel more or less handicapped; but in writing a 
letter to one whom we feel is en rapport with us it is 
as though spirit communed with spirit, all material 
limitations being eliminated. 

22 



SPRAY FROM THE OCEAN OF THOUGHT 

Whenever we see a man or woman apparently on 
the downward road let us not grease his or her path 
by our condemnation ; rather let us, in the name of 
sweet Charity, which knowing all, forgiveth all, 
sprinkle a little sand of sympathetic kindness on the 
track ; it may arrest their course, and so mark a turn- 
ing point in their lives. 

It requires but a little study of dogology to dis- 
cern that there are gentlemen and toughs in the ranks 
of dogdom, as well as in the ranks of men. 

The size of a man's bank account is very often in 
inverse proportion to the size of the diamonds he 
wears. 

Never run away from anything or anybody ; but 
if absolute necessity suggests to you the expediency 
of such an action do as many a good man has done 
before you, viz. change front; and then without in- 
culpating your self respect, you can "hit the trail" 
for all you are worth. 

If, when reading an article on any subject, you 
are without question willing to accept as true a fund- 
amental hypothesis, you then become receptive to the, 
ofttimes, narrow and biased views of the writer, 
thinking the while that all his ideas and assertions 
are so straightforward and logical, forgetting that 
the same are based on no more solid foundation than 
a mere supposition. 

Were it not for the rain, we could have no "bow 
in the clouds" ; so, were it not for the sorrow in our 
lives, we should miss many a rainbow of calm, peace- 
ful beauty, which can only be seen through tears. 

33 



SPRAY FROM THE OCEAN OF THOUGHT 

Who can measure the silent and powerful psycho- 
logical influence that pictures have on our lives? 
Some one has truly said: "A room hung with pic- 
tures is a room hung with thoughts." Each picture 
engenders within us a specific thought or line of 
thought, and, as "each passing thought will leave a 
trace, indelible upon the face," so by a slow, but 
nevertheless sure, cumulative process, not alone is 
our mentality affected, but organic changes are be- 
ing silently but surely effected in our faces — which 
are but the outward and visible expression of our 
thoughts. 

We cannot hold the happy moment, but we can 
string a Rosary of sweet remembrances, which will 
often be ito us a source of happiness, inspiration, 
comfort and strength. 

Thanks to the universal law of Compensation, the 
natures which are most keenly sensitive to mental 
pain are generally, also, as keenly sensitive to men- 
tal pleasure. Therefore, though they may feel in- 
tensely hurt for the moment, by litttle disappoint- 
ments, etc., encountered on the pathway of Life, 
which many would take no notice of, on the other 
hand, they gather much pleasure by plucking many 
beautiful flowers by the way — flowers that would be 
passed by, unnoticed, by those less sensitive. 



Taste in dress does not consist in being arrayed 
like the latest fashion plate, but in being clothed in 
the style that is best suited to one's individuality. 

24 



SPRAY FROM THE OCEAN OF THOUGHT 

Because a man or woman does not brood and 
worry over the many little troubles that are encoun- 
tered in the journey through Life, is no criterion that 
that person is insensible to the pangs of sorrow or 
anguish, or that their capacity for suffering is not as 
highly developed as many who never weary in talking 
of their trials and tribulations. ]Many who present a 
smiling and philosophical mien to the world, just 
after their sorrow, have, maybe, suffered as much, 
probably a great deal more — so intense was their suf- 
fering while it lasted — as those who by careful nurs- 
ing and futile worrying prolong their troubles. 

There is seldom a Rosary of happy memories that 
has not a Cross at the end. 

In suppressing Sympathy we crush one of the 
most fragrant flowers that bloom in the garden of 
the heart. 

It matters not, be the clouds in our mental sky 
real or only imaginary, the shadows cast upon us are, 
for the time being, equal in their intensity. 

The "sacred" bonds of matrimony, like the make- 
up on the face of a vaudeville actress, should gen- 
erally be viewed from a little distance. Very seldom 
can the matrimonial knot withstand the ordeal of hav- 
ing a searchlight focussed on it. 

A TRUE marriage — which can only be when soul is 
united to soul — is the happiest, most blessed state 
under heaven ; nay, it is heaven. 

25 



SPRAY FROM THE OCEAN OF THOUGHT 

A MAN or woman who journeys from the cradle to 
the grave alone, has only lived half a life. 

The most pitiful estrangements which occur be- 
tween erstwhile friends are those which are caused by 
simple misunderstandings which often seem to make 
them both sorrowfully dumb; and so the few words 
which would have explained all are never spoken. 

A LIFE all sunshine would soon become exceedingly 
monotonous and vapid. All our pleasures are derived 
from a sense of contrast ; and were it not for the rain 
in our lives we could not appreciate the sunshine as 
we do, the degree of our enjoyment being always 
based on Relativity. 

Rowing: With rowing, as with our progress 
through life generally, steady, strenuous application 
is what is required in order to make headway. Spas- 
modic efforts, even though they may be very strong 
while they last, are of little avail in pulling against 
the tide. 



The sight of He and She in a row-boat, with "She" 
grasping in her little hands the lines that guide their 
course, reminds one of many who have embarked on 
the old ship Wedlock under similar conditions. She — 
bless her innocent, trustful little heart — thinks she 
is going to navigate the ship throughout the voyage ! 
Don't shake her; she'll wake up soon enough, of her 
own accord. 

26 



SPRAY FROM THE OCEAN OF THOUGHT 

What a sense of Power there is in being always 
ready ! 

When the time comes for us to "cross the range," 
Memory will be all that we can take away with us ; 
and it rests with ourselves whether we shall carry an 
Incubus or a Blessing. 

As well try to stem the tides of the ocean as try to 
stop the flow of thought currents between sympa- 
thetic souls. 

One of the greatest enjoyments in connection with 
a beautiful and helpful saying, which we have culled 
during our literary browsings, is to pass it on to an 
appreciative friend. 

It seems paradoxical, yet nevertheless is it true, 
that, the more a girl really loves a young fellow, the 
keener is the delight, apparently, which she often 
takes, in hurting his feelings. And then knowing in- 
tuitively that she has done so, seeks the solitude of 
her chamber to have a genuine, sorrowful, remoia^ful 
cry! God bless 'em! "Who is't can read a woman?" 
as William of Stratford said. 

Cap and Bells : Though the cap and bells of the 
jester, as part of his apparel, have practically disap- 
peared, yet 'tis well that the "fool" lives on. People 
will often eagerly assimilate a sound, serious, logical 
truth, administered to them in homeopathic doses, to 
the jingle of a jester's bells, who would otherwise re- 
main in disinterested ignorance. 

27 



SPRAY FROM THE OCEAN OF THOUGHT 

Unfortunately, the great tendency with our gen- 
eral system of education, both in the home as well as 
in the school, is the vain endeavor to fashion all chil- 
dren in the same mould, to the lasting detriment of 
their greatest charm and birthright — their individu- 
ality. 

One of the greatest mistakes made by parents is 
that of ignoring the fact, that no two children are 
born into this world with the same characteristics. 
Though to a casual observer young babies may look 
as much alike as peas in a pod, yet bear in mind that 
each little morsel of humanity represents an indi- 
vidual embodiment of countless ages of thought, and 
that, ere trying to mould a child in the one family 
cast, it is very essential to study and endeavor to 
understand that child. Cultivate each one's indi- 
viduality and you will find that there will not be so 
many so-called "failures" in the world. 

If the individual who spoke of "sparing the rod 
and spoiling the child" meant to be taken literally, 
one has not much admiration for his system. If a 
child cannot be guided in the right path without the 
use of corporal punishment there must be something 
radically wrong with the system of training. The 
chief trouble is that many people do not begin the 
training process early enough. A child is never too 
young to be taught. 

It does not take much to alter the whole course of 
a life. A look, a word, or a silent clasp of the hand, 
and the current of our existence flows henceforth in: 
a different channel. 

28 



SPRAY FROM THE OCEAN OF THOUGHT 

Instead of arguing over the petty points of dif- 
ference in your so-called religious beliefs, rather seek 
the points on which you are in harmony. You will 
find that when you rise above mere names, and view 
matters from a spiritual standpoint, that there is 
much — and that the most imporant part — on which 
you are in sympahy with each other. 

True religion is a product of the heart, not of the 
head. 

Many people seem to lack in their make-up what 
the watchmakers call a "compensation balance." 

The population of this globe is made up of three 
classes of individuals, viz., those that are always 
thinking without acting, those that are ever acting 
without thinking; and lastly the comparative few 
that combine logical thinking with logical action. 

Fear is a sleepless demon ever lying in wait to 
accomplish the destruction of new hopes and ambi- 
tions ; and, with the majority of us, it is a case of 
■"The goblins will git you, ef you don't look out." 

The biggest fish we ever saw was the one that just 
escaped us ; the finest fruit our eyes ever beheld was 
on a bough just beyond our reach. 

Re burning your ships behind you — remember 
Lot's wife. 

39 



SPRAY FROM THE OCEAN OF THOUGHT 

We often hear "imagination" rather sneeringly 
put forward to account for many of the remarkable 
cures effected through the agency of various Shrines, 
Christian Science and other kindred methods of heal- 
ing. As long as the cure has been accomplished, it 
matters little what you call the means by which the 
desired effect h^as been brought about. If you are 
satisfied that the many wonderful cures — which can- 
not be denied — have been wrought solely in the 
"imagination" of the afflicted, instead of contemptu- 
ously sneering, would it not be more logical to cry, 
^*Vive V imagination^^ ! 

Ambition is the spur that is ever trying to prevent 
us lethargically rejoicing in the arms of Content- 
ment. 

To a great and visible extent, our ideas are often 
materialized in our apparel, but far greater and in- 
visible is the subtle influence exercised on our minds 
by the clothes we wear. 

Do IT NOW ; don't put off a matter simply because 
"it will only take a few minutes to do presently." 
Remember that if only ju«t five minutes is required 
in which to "do it now," the same amount of time 
will be needed anon ; when you may not be so well 
able to spare those few moments. 

After all, the hard-headed, intensely practical 
people, of whom we are so apt to speak rather de- 
preciatingly at times, often serve as bell-buoys, to 
warn off the Rocks of Delusion those who are con- 
tinually sailing on the Sea of Romance. 

30 



SPRAY FROM THE OCEAN OF THOUGHT 

Holy water: Tears of Joy from a pure, loving 
heart. 

Treat your body, not as yourself, but as some- 
thing belonging to you, something which is in your 
immediate charge, and which it is not only your duty 
but a matter of vital interest to you, to keep in the 
best possible condition. 

Unconsciously, we are ever impressing our per- 
sonality upon all inanimate objects with which we 
come in contact. 

A RASH individual indeed, who dares define the 
boundary line where the possible and the impossible 
meet. 

The way to instill others with a belief in you is to 
show them, not by words alone, but by deeds, that 
you believe in yourself. 

To say that anything is "supernatural" is to auto- 
cratically place a limit on Natural Law. How can 
anything that happens be supernatural? Before 
anything can be rightfully termed supernatural, 
there must of necessity be a definite limit to the na- 
tural ; and who so rash, in these days of X-rays, 
wireless telegraphy, etc., as to attempt the task of 
fixing the boundary? 

Vegetarianism engenders purity of body, and 
thereby paves the way for purity of Thought. Mens 
Sana in cor pore sano. 

31 



SPRAY FROM THE OCEAN OF THOUGHT 

If you must waste precious time and vital energy 
in impotent regret over something which you might 
have accomplished, but did not, just sit right down 
and turn on, wide open, the regret valve in your 
make-up. Having indulged your misery to the full, 
shut the valve, seal it tight, and let it so remain. 
Now, without indulging in further useless regret, ac- 
cept the experience as a needed lesson, which shall 
be to you an incentive to do better in the future. If 
you begin to feel the desire to start regretting again, 
do something; occupation is the greatest of all anti- 
dotes for worry or regret. 

Invariably, those who are the fiercest in their de- 
nunciation of any "New Thought" movement are the 
very ones who, on account of their supreme ignorance 
of the subject at issue, are the least competent of 
any to pass an opinion concerning it. 

Fear is the relentless juggernaut to which we are 
continually sacrificing our fondest hopes and aspira- 
tions. 

"I've come to the conclusion," said the bald- 
headed old gentleman who sat in the cozy-corner, be- 
hind a big cigar and a Scotch highball, "that Life is 
very much like a cocktail, with the exception that 
frequently in Life the 'bitters' are not so delicately 
blended with the 'sweets' as they are in a well-made 
Martini." And, judging by the color of his nose, he 
knew what he was talking about — when speaking of 
anything connected with the "wet goods" department 
of Life ! 

39 



SPRAY FROM THE OCEAN OF THOUGHT 

The mastery of any subject depends, not so much 
on the length of time spent thereon, as on the degree 
of concentration applied. 

A MOST excellent moral lesson, and one which 
should inspire us with firmness, decision and courage, 
is conveyed in the old quatrain relating to that plant, 
the stinging nettle : 

Tender-handed stroke a nettle. 

And it stings you for your pains ; 
Grasp it, like a man of mettle, 
And it soft as silk remains. 
The stinging nettle, under timid handling, is found 
to be painfully aggressive ; but when handled with 
fiiTTi, unhesitating courage, it is absolutely harmless. 

The food we eat undoubtedly exerts a strong in- 
fluence over our thoughts ; hence, as an inevitable 
consequence, largely dominates our actions. 

To be ever earnest in aspiration and well-doing, is 
to "pray without ceasing." 

We are very free in expressing our opinions con- 
cerning the tricks and habits of the monkeys ; it 
would be very interesting to know just what their 
opinions are regarding us. 

Judicious advertising is the lubricator by means 
of which the wheels of business are kept revolving. 

As we ourselves advance, so with our ideals ; at no 
time can we see beyond our horizon. 

33 



SPRAY FROM THE OCEAN OF THOUGHT 

When the veneer of our so-called Christianity and 
Civilization gets rubbed off, the fact is revealed, that 
beneath the thin outer covering of conventionality 
and fear of the law, human nature — at the core — is 
about the same as it was when our ancestors' only 
covering from the winds of heaven was their blissful 
unconsciousness of impropriety. 

If unpleasant thoughts are trying to force them- 
selves upon you, don't endeavor to overcome them by 
aggressive tactics ; rather direct your mind to "still 
waters" — to something pleasant. Persist in this 
procedure for a while, and you will find that the un- 
welcome thoughts will quietly steal away, vanishing 
like darkness before the rising sun. 

The plan of reading over, the first thing in the 
morning, a few bright, helpful thoughts and then 
spending, say, fifteen minutes in silent meditation, 
will be found wonderfully beneficial, both from a phy- 
sical, as well as a moral, point of view. It tends to 
adjust one to the higher forces of Nature; in other 
words, to put us "in tune with the Infinite." 

A MAN never yet won the admiration and respect 
of a woman by always letting her have her own way. 
A woman's heart is "like the ivy, accustomed to 
cling," and intuitively it prefers to cling to the 
sturdy oak, rather than to the yielding poplar. 

In the scrimmage of Life, ordinary, every-day 
gumption often succeeds, where a college education 
fails. 

34 



SPRAY FROM THE OCEAN OF THOUGHT 

Alike invisible to the eye, thought currents are 
as real as the currents of the air ; and as soon as we 
fully realize the truth and potentiality of this, and 
apply the knowledge, in a practical way, to the af- 
fairs of Life, we have within our grasp, a mighty 
lever which, rightly applied, is capable of "removing 
mountains." 

Form the habit of writing at least one complete 
thought, grave or gay, each day. This may seem a 
small matter, but at the end of a year you will find, 
not only that you have amassed a written collection 
of your ideas — some of which at least are worth 
while — but that you have also benefitted very con- 
siderably, from an ethical point of view. 

The longer one lives, the more does one realize the 
immanence and immutability of God; not God as a 
Spirit, but God as Spirit. It was said by one, long 
since, "No man hath seen God at any time," and the 
more we realize the existence of that omnipresent 
over-soul, or God, the stronger is the conviction that 
that statement will be tenable throughout the long 
cycle of ages yet to come. 

The men who have left their mark on the pages of 
History have not been those who blindly followed in 
the footsteps of others, but have been men who have 
"blazed a trail" through the labyrinth of Life for 
themselves. 

The vast majority are in no danger of being lost 
in the Ocean of Thought, seeing that they never ven- 
ture be3^ond the ropes set by the hand of Convention- 
ality. 

35 



SPRAY FROM THE OCEAN OF THOUGHT 

The subject of pre-natalism is so full of poten- 
tialities which bear directly on the well-being of the 
human race that it is one of the most interesting and 
vital studies within our reach. No one in ignorance 
of the vast possibilities of pre-natal conditions is 
fully qualified to enter the marriage state. 

What an amount of useless anxiety we should be 
spared could we but fully realize the vital truth con- 
tained in that beautiful prayer breathed by John 
Henry Newman, known as "Lead Kindly Light," and 
so, at all times, supported by unwavering faith, be 
able to say, "one step enough for me." 

When, after calm deliberation, you have definitel}" 
decided that, in following a certain course of action, 
you are conscientiously doing that which is right and 
best, don't allow yourself to lapse into occasional 
states of fear and ferment by encountering imaginary 
difficulties. Ever hold before your eyes the ultimate 
success of your venture, and, instead of borrowing 
trouble in advance, learn to school yourself to more 
fully realize that the distant future should not be 
a source of agitation and depression of spirit — that 
it is the now that commands our attention, and that, 
if we attend to and do our best in the present, the 
future will take care of itself. And instead of won- 
dering and fidgeting, as to what we will do under 
some difficulty which we have conjured up to meet us 
on our way, let us remember the words of a well 
known hymn, "Great your strength, if great your 
need." 

36 



SPRAY FROM THE OCEAN OF THOUGHT 

The practise of true Spiritualism consists in fol- 
lowing, as nearly as one can, in the footsteps of the 
Master ; doing good to others, wherever and whenever 
we can ; in being kind. 

- Ali. that is highest and best in the world, all that 
is beautiful and inspiring, everything that tends to 
bear us "onward and upward," is inseparable from 
true Spiritualism. 

Have you ever noticed the curious fact that, as a 
rule, the smartest and cleverest people we have ever 
met have possessed many ideas in common with our- 
selves ? 

If you cannot pass a cheerful remark to a friend 
on his healthful appearance, don't be one of the 
anxious crowd who are ever ready to say "how ill you 
are looking." More harm than we are aware of has 
been accomplished through the mediumship of that 
remark. 

When seeking to overcome physical pain, do not 
forget that pain is but an eiFect which shows that 
our system is out of harmony ; and that, before a per- 
manent change for the better can be effected, the in- 
strument must be put in tune. 

In proportion as superstitious reverence and un- 
reasoning awe for the Bible decreases, so admiration, 
esteem and practical understanding of its many 
grand and beautiful truths increases. 

37 



SPRAY FROM THE OCEAN OF THOUGHT 

Unless we say the words, as they are often said, 
in just a perfunctory sort of a way, not expecting an 
answer, it is, generally speaking, better that the 
words "How do you do?" be left unsaid. The very 
question gives the suggestion that there may be 
something the matter with the person addressed ; and 
why should we presume such a thing? Is it at all 
necessary, does it do any good, to give a suggestion 
that is in any way connected with sickness? Decid- 
edly not. You will find that you will accomplish 
much more practical good by substituting some 
cheerful form of salutation, instead of the time- 
honored "suggestion" in question. 



When you find yourself in company with some one 
who is feeling dull and despondent, don't let their 
state of mental depression ensnare you also. Rather 
watch your opportunity to say something cheerful 
and interesting to them ; and so gradually change the 
current of their thoughts, and the result will soon be 
manifest in their personal demeanor. 



Poverty is the Spur of Life, Anticipation the 
spice, and Hope the lubricant. 

On a par with the individual who "didn't know it 
was loaded" is the one who, after thoughtlessly utter- 
ing some unkind remark to a fellow creature and sub- 
sequently realizing that he or she has been deeply 
wounded thereby, says, "You shouldn't take any no- 
tice of what I say ; I didn't mean to hurt you." 

38 



SPRAY FROM THE OCEAN OF THOUGHT 

Avoid, as much as possible, talking to others about 
your ailments. The doleful thoughts which you send 
forth will, after the manner of a boomerang, return 
to you again, intensified, by the added lugubrious 
thoughts of your auditors. 

If we all felt and thought alike this world would 
be a most monotonous place to live in. 

The chief trouble lies, not in the lack of oppor- 
tunities, but in our failure to recognize and grasp the 
same. 

Learn to rely on your own judgment; do not be 
like one in a flock of sheep, following a "bell-wether." 

One of the hardest lessons to be learned is that of 
Patience ; that Patience which means, as a little 
Scotch girl said, "to bide a wee and dinna weary." 

The name Metaphysical or Spiritual Healing is, 
comparatively speaking, new; yet the principle in- 
volved, being founded on the rock of Truth, was old 
when the Sphinx was young. 

When, after calm and mature deliberation, you 
have formed a certain opinion, which you honestly 
believe to be correct, have the courage of your con- 
victions. Do not silently allow your opinion to be 
brushed aside as being altogether wrong, simply be- 
cause it does not happen to quite agree with that of 
someone who is endowed with greater powers of self- 
assertion than yourself. The chances are that you 
are right and the other wrong. There is such a thing 
as "morbid humility." 

39 



SPRAY FROM THE OCEAX OF THOUGHT 

Uncharitable, hateful thoughts, instead of really 
harming the one at whom they are projected, return 
like a boomerang and smite their sender. 

It is impossible for the mental seeds of unrest and 
discord to produce a harvest of peace and harmony. 

As long as the world wags, there will be "Mi- 
cawbers" with us, ever serenely "waiting for some- 
thing to turn up," whilst their more successful 
competitors in the struggle for existence are, by 
their own diligence and fixity of purpose, ever turn- 
ing something up for themselves. 

Faith, without reason to support it, is often little 
more than mere credulity. 

If we are "girded with the armour of Light," 
which must of necessity be forged within the wearer, 
we need not fear the slings and arrows of any 
adversary. 

What a lot of the sorrow of this world is caused 
through misunderstanding. "Across the Range" 
matters will be very different ; there we shall get the 
actual thought and so not be dependent on a faulty 
expression of the same. 

How much useless work could be avoided if we 
would only exercise a little thought beforehand by 
formulating in our minds just what we wish to 
accomplish ; and then, to use an expression of the 
printing office, "follow copy." 

40 



SPRAY FROM THE OCEAN OF THOUGHT 

Music expresses, in a language divine, thoughts 
for which words are inadequate. 

Never allow yourself to be debarred, by timidity, 
from obeying the silent promptings of your heart. 

Learn to live one day at a time ; do your best in 
the NOW. Though you may have laid important 
plans in connection with the future, take no anxious 
thought for the morrow. You will further your 
interests much more by being patient, calm and 
trustful. In this frame of mind you are giving, to 
the seed you have sown, the best possible conditions 
you can, for its development. By being in a har- 
monious, peaceful, receptive condition you not only 
are giving the immanent God — or Good — within you 
the opportunity to unfold, but you are, in addition, 
unconsciously exerting a centripetal force, which, 
reaching over the entire universe, attracts to you 
the very elements of success necessary for your 
undertaking. 

Troublous thoughts naturally create inharmony 
in our mental system, and this lack of harmony 
eventually demonstrates itself in our physical system 
in the form of sickness or disease. 

If you have a manuscript which you know is good, 
don't be discouraged if it does not find anchorage at 
the first port to which you send it. Send it out again 
and again, and yet again, until at last, like Noah's 
dove, having found a resting place, it will return to 
you no more. 

41 



SPRAY FROM THE OCEAN OF THOUGHT 

Be not content to "let the blessed sunshine in** 
only, but let us also strive to give out gleams of 
sunlight. In giving, we receive. 

Flowers : Stars of the Earth. 

A PERSON may be called a Brahmin, Parsee, Jew, 
Atheist, Buddist, Mohammedan, or any other name, 
and yet be at heart a true Christian ; one who anon, 
though the name even of Jesus has been unknown, 
will hear, in essence, the words, "Inasmuch as ye did 
it unto the least of these, my brethren, ye did it unto 
me." 

The true Mark Tapleyian spirit, to be jolly under 
distressing circumstances, is a consummation to- 
wards which we should all aspire. There certainly 
is no credit due us for being jolly if we have nothing 
to bother us. 

When one has no weight of care resting on him, 
how much easier it is to write pithy little aphorisms 
on the impotency of worry than it is, when many 
cares infest the day, to live up to what he has 
written. 

When clouds seem hovering o'er you, and every- 
thing looks dark, think of time spent in the sunshine, 
and listen in memory to the music of God's feathered 
choristers, the ever joyful birds merrily singing in 
the glen. Gradually, but surely, some of that 
memorized sunlight will steal into your being and 
gently dispel the overhanging gloom. 



SPRAY FROM THE OCEAN OF THOUGHT 

There are moments when, oblivious to all material 
limitations, we feel possessed of power as of the gods. 
This is our real strength seeking to manifest itself, 
and thereby giving us a glimpse of what might and 
would be could we but conquer our innate fear of 
material conditions. The marksman must keep his 
eye fixed on the point he wishes to hit. Remember, 
too, that thought is a creative force, and that every 
thought-wave of doubt or fear which you send forth 
attracts to itself similar thoughts, and eventually 
tends to mould the very conditions you wish to 
avoid. 

In time of prosperity it is an easy matter to sing 
"My Faith looks up to Thee" ; but, to know the real 
value of our Faith, we must note our attitude in time 
of trouble. 

As viewed through the lens of their respective 
memories, a remark which suggests comedy to one 
person may, to another, suggest tragedy. 

Versatility is a most excellent and desirable 
thing, at times, and we are apt to feel a sort of 
admiration for the man who "can do so many 
things" ; yet, ofttimes the accompaniment of versa- 
tility is an empty pocketbook, whilst the plodding 
individual who only knows how to do just the one 
thing, at which he is getting his living, has a com- 
fortable home and a snug bank account. 

To be the happy possessor, or even to look at and 
e'en for a few moments handle, a beautiful hand- 
made book leaves a sweet, gentle and indelible in- 
fluence on one's life. 

43 



SPRAY FROM THE OCEAN OF THOUGHT 

With regard to self-treatment, the unfortunate 
part is that when we most need it is the very time 
that we are in the worst condition to give it, and so 
we can understand why the admonition, "Physician, 
heal thyself," is ofttimes difficult to follow. 

A LITTI.E occasional fun and nonsense is to Life 
what the sparkles are to a glass of champagne. 

People sometimes speak of "losing" one-third of 
their lives in sleep. Did they but realize the vast 
potentialities which await the seeker along that line 
of research, they would rather view the region of 
slumber as a vast, unexplored country, abounding in 
precious gifts, which are to him who seeks. 

The laws of Nature are immutable. In bygone 
days, dreams or visions occasionally meant a great 
deal. If so then, why not Now? 

A RAY of sunlight aroused within us, e'en though 
its duration be but for a moment, and though we 
may soon forget it, has 3'^et left its indelible influence 
on our lives. 

Though the clouds hang heavy about us, a cheer- 
ful letter from a friend will oftentimes dispel the 
gloom and create life-giving sunshine within us. 

Most people are satisfied to say, "I believe." The 
few who lead the world in thought are only satisfied 
when they can say, "I know." 

44 



SPRAY FROM THE OCEAN OF THOUGHT 

By searching into the vast possibilities connected 
with this life, such as those offered by a study of 
telepathy, for example, we — perhaps unconsciously 
at first, but surely — draw nearer to a truer and 
more perfect realization of the life which awaits us 
beyond the last milestone. 

FiGUEATivELY Speaking, "the handwriting on the 
wall," is yet a frequent occurrence in most of our 
lives ; but alas ! like Belshazzar of old, we, from our 
incompetence to read, await the interpretation of a 
"Daniel." 

As a rule, it is not the pioneer, let the field be one 
of thought or physical action, who scores a success 
financially, but those who follow in his wake. 

Our greatest pleasures are not derived from what 
others do for us, but from what we do for others. 



') 



When the stomach is crying aloud for susten- 
ance, which cometh not, the brain is not in a favor- 
able condition to transmit eulogistic aphorisms on 
the philosophy of poverty ! 

The danger of versatility, considered in the light 
of being detrimental to one's success in life, does not 
come from versatility per se; but, rather, from lack 
of concentrative force wherewith to apply ourselves. 

There are no free passes on the Road to Heaven ; 
no scalper's tickets to be bought ; and only one non- 
transferable passport obtainable by each individual 
— and that to be gained, not by the transfer of 
dollars and cents, but by working one's passage, the 
only way to reach the celestial terminus. 

45 



SPRAY FROM THE OCEAN OF THOUGHT 

Some of the greatest changes in our lives appear 
to hinge on the merest trifles. 

Steady, persistent, unwavering effort is the golden 
key, which unlocks the door of Success. 

Divorce: A much-abused blessing. 

If ever the time comes when large feet are con- 
sidered a mark of beauty, what a chance there will 
be for universal expansion. 

The most vehement denunciators of the peaceful 
pipe or fragrant cigar, are those who have never 
known the pleasure of a tranquil smoke. 

When the question as to what becomes of the 
flies in winter, is definitely settled, we shall perhaps 
be able to elucidate the problem as to what becomes 
of the old men in our large cities. 

The silent voice of Doubt is the skeleton which 
is ever insiduously obtruding itself into our most 
cherished hopes. 

The Imagination of one age is the Reality of the 
next. 

Propinquity, rather than heaven, is responsible 
for the majority of the matches that are made. 

Though we may experience a thrill of intense 
pleasure on visiting scenes which are entirely new to 
us, the acme of joy is reached when we find in them 
reminders of happy days that have been. 

46 



SPRAY FROM THE OCEAN OF THOUGHT 

To those who have once lived for any length of 
time in the mountains, whenever and wherever they 
may in after life find themselves in proximity to the 
everlasting hills, a feeling of joyous enthusiasm is 
experienced, which has a kindred feeling to that 
which we feel on meeting a long-lost friend. 

Blessed is the man who knows when to keep silent. 

Whenever the sweet old name of Dorothy is 
mentioned in one's presence one seems to hear the 
hum of a spinning wheel and also get a mental 
glimpse of a rosy-cheeked little maid, with cap on 
head and buckles on her shoes, dancing the stately 
minuet. 

System is the pivot on which turns the life of the 
successful worker. 

The shallow brook babbles whilst the deep and 
fathomless river flows on in silence. 

The last day of the year : Those who cannot con- 
trol themselves even for a day, are generally the 
ones who, at this time, make, with the utmost sang 
froid, the greatest number of resolutions to be 
enforced by themselves, on themselves, for an entire 
year. 

'Tis not mere location that makes a home, but 
that attribue of God — kindness. 

Birthday wish: That each successive milestone 
on your journey through Life may be enwreathed 
with happy memories of the past, is the heartfelt 
wish of . 

47 



SPRAY FROM THE OCEAN OF THOUGHT 

Patience : The silent lesson of Nature. 

System is the balance wheel which regulates the 
machinery of all business. 

Music is the voice of the Soul. 

How often, in looking backward, do we realize 
that we have gained benefit by losing of our prayers. 
How many of our erstwhile longed-for and unattain- 
able stars have dwindled down to the magnitude of 
farthing rushlights ! 

If the keeping of good resolutions was only as 
easy as the making of them, what a crop of new 
candidates for halos there would be, at the end of 
each year. 

Suffering is as essential to the growth of the soul 
as moisture is to the growing plant. 

In the building up of character, which is the indi- 
vidual, it is not actual success or failure, but 
earnest effort, which counts. 

It often happens that the most shining examples 
of true Christianity are found amongst those who 
are regarded by many so-called Christians, as either 
athiests or heathens. 

A COLD bath is a coat of liquid armour. 

A SNOWBALL rolling downhill and a libelous story 
being passed from one to another are much alike, in 
that they both increase as they go. 

48 



SPRAY FROM THE OCEAN OF THOUGHT 

Momentum is one of the greatest essentials to 
success in matters of brain or brawn. Without it, 
of what use are the highest resolutions, either to be 
or to do? 

Self-discipline is not alone of the greatest bene- 
fit to its votary, but the one who practises it uncon- 
sciously exercises a far-reaching influence for good 
amongst others. 

Hope is the alchemist that transmutes dread 
despair into sanguine potentiality. 

Silence is the voice of God. 

Do your work as well as you can, and, while 
recognizing the fact that others may equal your 
efforts, make it impossible for them to be surpassed. 
With this aim ever in view you must succeed. 

True spiritual growth cannot develop of itself 
alone; it is to the material body, with its physical 
senses, as the perfume is to the rose. 

Headaches are Nature's danger signals. 

Remember that a gunner, firing at a target, must 
always aim a little above his mark — never below it. 
In aiming high we may strike a little below our 
mark, but in aiming low we shall never strike higher 
than our aim ; therefore, aim high. 

Ink is a most useful and widespread invention, 
which has succeeded in making its mark wherever it 
has been introduced. 

49 



SPRAY FROM THE OCEAN OF THOUGHT 

Affinity is the unseen lubricator which facilitates, 
beyond measure, our dealings with one another in 
matters pertaining to business, as well as socially. 

There are very few of us who are not, more or 
less, slaves of atmospheric influence. Only those 
who have perpetual sunshine in their souls are proof 
against the depressing influence of a dull, foggy 
day. 

If you wish to acquire the reputation of being 
about as shallow-brained as a soup-plate, get into 
the habit of giving an empty little laugh after 
nearly all your remarks, as well as after those of 
others. 

Affectation is never the sign of a strong 
character. 

Work is life's appetisant for rest. 

Never mind how strong, in the aggregate, your 
opponent may be, he is no stronger than his weakest 
point. Little David not only knew his opportunity 
as to when, but also where^ to strike the giant 
Goliath. 

The shadows cast by coming events are often 
made manifest to us in dreams. 

Capital punishment is a blot on the escutcheon 
of so-called civilization. 

Harmony is the key-note of the universe. 

50 



SPRAY FROM THE OCEAN OF THOUGHT 

True success in life is not always accompanied by 
a big bank account. 

Every married couple should have a "separation" 
— for a few weeks at least — each year. 

Our word is one of the few things we can give to 
another and at the same time keep ourselves ! — 
Would that the "rint" could be covered in like 
manner. 

Regret is only of use to us when it becomes an 
incentive to future betterment. 

Imagination is the foundation of all that is, was, 
or ever shall be. 

E'en though all churchly creeds and formulas 
shall pass away, true religion will ever, as now, 
stand, strong and serene. 

Death is the portal through which we all must 
pass, to find on the other side that which we, by 
our lives here, have created for ourselves. 

Be ready to take advantage of an advantage when 
it presents itself; grip it and hold to it with 
tenacious purpose, follow it up, don't let it slip 
away from you. 

How can we dare presume to understand and 
pass judgment upon others, when at the same time 
we are woefully lacking in knowledge of ourselves? 

51 



SPRAY FROM THE OCEAN OF THOUGHT 

Think, plan, act; and having done jour best, 
don't be like a child who has planted a slip, and is 
all the time digging it up, to see if it has taken root ; 
but go about your business and "doe ye nextte 
thynge," and the seed you have sown will mature in 
its own good time, all the better for the fact that 
you have left it alone. 

We, like photographic plates, need to pass 
through the dark room — in our case, the dark-room 
of adversity — in order to develop the highest and 
best in our natures. 

Ambition is the chief spur which helps a man 
to hold his place in the surging procession of Life. 

Heredity is the ubiquitous voice of the past. 

Babies are oftentimes the silken cords by means 
of which the home is kept together. 

Purgatory, like heaven or hell, is a condition; 
and it rests with ourselves, here and now, how long 
a time we shall spend therein, for there we shall have 
to confront, face to face, the ghostly consequences 
of our past misdeeds. That "the purifying fire of 
God's influence" will ultimately reach, even those in 
the darkest corner, none, who believe in a loving 
Father and Mother, God, can doubt. And what 
more beautiful than the thought that we, by our 
earnest prayers, can join the ministering angels of 
heaven in aiding some poor undeveloped soul to get 
a glimpse of the light which is to lead it onward and 
upward. 



SPRAY FROM THE OCEAN OF THOUGHT 

Death and resurrection are ever in our midst. 
Even the sorrows which we bury with bitter tears 
often rise again and come to us as blessings. 

Confession is the safety-valve of many a troubled 
heart. 

Self-knowledge: Let every one endeavor to be- 
come acquainted with their capabilities, physical, 
mental and spiritual, then make earnest use of their 
ever-widening knowledge. 

Happy moments, like kind words, can never die; 
they may lie sleeping, but, at a touch of the magic 
wand of memory, they come again, in spirit, to 
comfort and cheer us. 

How many square pegs there are trying to fit into 
round holes, simply from a lack of self-knowledge. 

Self-knowledge is at once the most conservative 
and yet at the same time the most comprehensive 
study one can pursue. 

Alas for the one whose Past is enwreathed with 
the withered buds of lost opportunities. 

The husband who cannot see anything to admire 
in anyone but his wife, and the wife who is as blindly 
infatuated with her husband, are each like unto a 
person in a lovely flower garden who has eyes for 
one flower only. Because we admire and love the 
beauteous rose, must we ignore the sweet and modest 
violet or the drooping, graceful lily? 

53 



SPRAY FROM THE OCEAN OF THOUGHT 

The brain of a person is no more the originator 
of a lofty idea or a sublime thought than a musical 
instrument is the originator of soul-inspiring music. 

Self-control, is to a human being what the 
balance-wheel is to a timepiece, or what the governor 
is to an engine. 

Disappointments are the necessary shadows of 
life. With character, as with the flowers, shade is 
necessary for development ; perpetual sunshine 
would tend to enervate, instead of strengthen. 

In algebraic problems, the unknown quantity, is 
represented by X ; in connection with social problems 
relative to the sexes we designate it W-0-M-A-N. 

Philosophy is the science of reasoning which 
enables us to view things in their true light, with 
special reference to the natural law of cause and 
effect, and in the realization of the truth comes 
freedom from that vampire which feeds on soul and 
body alike — worry. 

Not in the mere action of abstinence from flesh 
on one particular day in the week does the soul gain 
strength ; but it is in the overcoming of self that the 
spirit strengthens. 

Moral courage is the most courageous courage 
of all. 

54 



SPRAY FROM THE OCEAN OF THOUGHT 

It may sound paradoxical, yet it is nevertheless 
true, that sheer, unmitigated laziness has played a 
very active part in the progress of the world. 
Many of the most valuable inventions have been the 
direct outcome of ideas which were evolved in the 
brains of individuals who, from positive indolence, 
essayed experiments whereby they might lighten 
their tasks. 

Punctuality is the essence of Good Form. 

Prejudice is a tyrant whose fetters are generally 
hard to break. 

Have you ever noticed, on entering some homes, 
how a feeling of peace and rest comes over you ; 
whilst in others, as soon as you enter, you begin to 
feel all hors de combat? What causes this difference? 
The undeniable fact that the very walls, and the 
inanimate objects within those walls, manifest in a 
most subtle, yet nevertheless decided manner, the 
influence, harmonious or otherwise, of those whose 
lives are passed within and amongst them. 

Many people who find it a most easy matter to 
preach on and extol the merits of economy, when 
they have not anything to be extravagant with, 
apparently forget their own precepts when they 
have the opportunity to practise them. 

Just punishment, in the shape of inevitable con- 
sequence, ever attends the unworthy deed or thought. 

55 



SPRAY FROM THE OCEAN OF THOUGHT 

Those who do not fully appreciate, or in other 
words "catch on" to the ofttimes discriminating 
subtleties of slang, had better leave it alone. 

One of the greatest and most helpful joys of this 
life is reading. By reading good books we get en 
rapport, soul to soul, with the brightest and best 
minds of the past and present. 

Faith is the unseen balancing pole which we ever 
need carry in our hands on our journey through 
life. 



Don't wait for big opportunities, but seize and 
make the most of available little ones, and so be 
better prepared to grasp the greater when they 
come. 



Only by sympathy with the human can we, in any 
degree, realize the Divine. 

Sin is something we can see much better and 
clearer in our neighbor than in ourselves. 

Stubbornness is that characteristic of other 
people which manifests itself when they decline to 
do as we want them. 

Bad thoughts are the progenitors of bad deeds. 

56 



SPRAY FROM THE OCEAN OF THOUGHT 

Who can look into the tender, liquid eyes of 
either a loving horse or a dog and doubt that they 
— ^the eyes — are but the windows of a soul which has 
been and will go on evolving higher and higher? 
There is but one life ; but infinite in varieties of 
form is that life during its different stages. 

HoNOE is the plumb-line of life. 

Why wait for the first of January to make good 
resolutions? Despite what the calender may say, 
each day that dawns is a New Year's Day ; and the 
time to make and keep good resolutions is Now. 

Harmony is the foundation of good health; the 
physical is practically but a reflection of the mental 
or spiritual, and a calm body cannot be projected 
by a perturbed mind. 

Babies are little rose-buds of vast potentialities. 

Resurrection follows so-called death, as the 
morning follows the night; nothing can die. 

The chief aim of religion should be to teach man 
how to live aright — NOW. If we live rightly now, 
the future need give us no concern; it will take care 
of itself. 

Suicide is a short cut to positive knowledge of the 
life beyond the river — but what about the cost? 

57 



SPRAY FROM THE OCEAN OF THOUGHT 

Adversity is a lash which frequently blesses e'en 
while it cuts us. 

Ere lamenting our poverty, let us look around, 
and the sight of heart-rending misery patiently 
endured by others much less fortunate than our- 
selves will often make us feel rich. 

Speaking a kind word is like dropping a pebble 
in the water ; its influence is felt in ever-widening 
circles that extend far beyond our ken. 

Hell, is a subjective condition induced by the vio- 
lation of natural law. 

Ingratitude is frequently encountered in human 
beings, but seldom in the so-called "brute creation." 

A mother's love is a flame, than which no clearer 
burns on earth or in heaven. 

A BIRTHDAY wish I As the milestones of life glide 
by, may you ever, not only keep up with the proces- 
sion, but be able to get a seat on the band-wagon, 
is the wish of . 

Rest does not of necessity imply a state of utter 
idleness or passivity ; true rest is more often simply 
a change of occupation. 

FoRGETFULNEss, though not generally included in 
the category of sins, sometimes comes pretty close 
to the boundary line. 

58 



SPRAY FROM THE OCEAN OF THOUGHT 

Love is the hub of the wheel of life. 

Shattered hopes are often the foundations of 
great achievements. 

Sarcasm is a vehicle of speech by means of which 
hot shot can be fired under the guise of snowballs. 

Flashlight pictures are not necessarily untruth- 
ful because they generally tell stories. 

Do your best at whatever you undertake. The 
artist who, relatively speaking, takes the same care 
and pains in painting a pig-sty as he would a palace 
is the one who is bound to succeed. 

Don't be a mental derelict floating around on the 
sea of other peoples' opinions ; learn to think for 
yourself. 

A MAN who is a comparative stranger to his real 
self cannot possibly form but a superficial opinion of 
others. 



A LITTLE philosophy is ofttimes the finest oil with 
which to calm the troublous waters of life. 



The "little leaven that leaveneth the whole lump" 
of one's troubles is ofttimes that gift of the gods — 
philosophy. 

59 



SPRAY FROM THE OCEAN OF THOUGHT 

One of the greatest barriers to unfoldment is 
prejudice, generally founded on opinions formed of 
something we really know nothing about. 

Sometimes, in our dreams, we undoubtedly get a 
foretaste of that life beyond the range. 

Never hestitate to apologize if you are in the 
wrong. Far from being a sign of weakness, as many 
seem to think, it demonstrates strength and nobility 
of character. 



A POOR talker who speaks in praise of teetotalisra 
at a temperance meeting will meet with a much 
better reception than a brilliant orator who extols 
the flowing bowl. There is a time for all things, and 
the fact of knowing how to speak is of secondary 
consideration to knowing what to speak. 

Concentration is the "open sesame" before 
which barriers we had deemed well-nigh impregnable 
give way. 

Passivity, receptivity, action. 

Earnest concentration should of necessity em- 
brace confidence, and of these twain is begotten con- 
quest. 

Abundance is — enough. Enough is — abundance.. 

60 



SPRAY FROM THE OCEAN OF THOUGHT 

Persistency, consistency and insistency form a 
trinity which is hard to beat. 

If we could only talk without using words, how 
much better we oftentimes would understand each 
other. 

The speeches and promises of the landlord may, 
and alas often do, come under the head of "hot air" ; 
but that fact does not heighten the temperature 
around cold radiators. 

How easy to let go the thread, but alas how diffi- 
cult to pick it up again. 

If you are not feeling happy, don't go around 
with the inscription, "I am miserable" plainly 
depicted on your countenance. You will only arouse 
depressing thoughts in others, which, again reflecting 
on you, will make your mental state worse than 
before. Cultivate a happy look, anyhow. You will 
then arouse bright helpful thoughts in others, which 
will in like manner reflect on, but in place of 
increasing your mental gloom, will help you. 

A LITTLE time spent in systematizing is a paying 
proposition from the start, and is an investment 
which pays dividends. 

In this period of thought, so connected with the 
power of the mind over the physical body, let us not 
ignore the definite effect of the physical body over 
the Mind. 

61 



SPRAY FROM THE OCEAN OF THOUGHT 

To clearly and definitely realize just what part 
fate plays in our life is what our Scotch friends call 
a "kittle point." Beaconsfield says, in one of his 
books, that a man's destiny is beyond his control, 
but his conduct is in his own power. This view, 
though not perhaps to be regarded as final, yet is 
good, as it tends to impress on us the necessity of 
doing our best under all circumstances, to live in the 
present — the NOW — and let the future take caie 
of itself. 



There are very few women, or men either, who, 
when no one was looking, have not at times kissed, 
because of its associations, some inanimate object, 
such as a faded flower, a photograph, or a lock of 
hair. Though we do not advise the market place as 
the spot for an exhibition of sentiment in this 
manner, there being a time and place for all things, 
we do say, if you feel like kissing a lock of hair, or 
any other tangible link in connection with the sweet 
memory of days that are gone, kiss it. Be true to 
your inmost impulses, to your nature — be yourself. 
Life comes through expression ; repression, as Fra 
Elbertus says, is stagnation, death. We grow from 
within ; and the strongest, most sterling characters, 
the manliest men and the most womanly women, are 
not found in the ranks of those who sneer at senti- 
ment. 



Optimism is that characteristic which enables 
one to ride through life, by the daylight route of 
hope, instead of by the subway of despair. 

62 



SPRAY FROM THE OCEAN OF THOUGHT 

Who can define Time? It is, was, and ever will 
be ; yet it has no fixed standard, all is relative. 
Under certain conditions, in the space of a few brief 
moments — as reckoned by the dial — one may seem 
to live years. And, during periods of great happi- 
ness and joy, we are apt to lose sight of Time com- 
pletely. Even as perfect Love casteth out fear, so 
perfect joy annihilates Time. 

It is the little things that separate us from suc- 
cess — not the big ones. 

Spirit friends are ministering angels sent by the 
Father to cheer and guide us on our journey to the 
"lang hame." And our failure to realize their help- 
ful visits is no proof that they come not. As Emily 
Dickinson (a friend and schoolmate of Helen Hunt 
Jackson) says, "Not revelation 'tis that waits, but 
our unfurnished eyes." Knowing the truth; we 
should be able to say, with Whittier: 

"I have FRIENDS in Spirit Land, 

Not shadows in a shadowy band. 
Not others, but themselves are they." 

Nothing "they say" can hurt us, only in propor- 
tion as we invest the words with power to do so. If 
the cap does not fit us, why need we care? As a 
philosophical young girl we knew lang syne used to 
remark, concerning what "they said" about her: "I 
don't care what they say about me, as long as they 
don't speak the truth/' There's the rub. 



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